Effective total cost: $3–5/mo
Decide on an EC2 instance type:
- At AWS Console → EC2 → Instance Types, filter for ≥1 GB RAM and sort by price.
- t4g.micro is lowest.
This document walks you through the steps to prepare a wget
compatible link from a file that is located in your Google Drive.
Motivation: When working in Deep Learning, we often use Google Colab, Kaggle Kernels, or Cloud Instances for training our models on GPUs. But the problem that comes with it is we often have to upload all the necessary files required to get things up and running. This is particularly problematic when we have a large dataset and this cannot be uploaded/gathered directly (sometimes, scp
does not work as well). We may have a dataset stored in our Google Drives. In situations like that, we generally create a wget
compatible link from the file (typically the dataset) located in our Google Drive (this document only deals with Google Drive).
Link sharing on
section, change the permissions of your file to "Anyone with the link can view" and copy the link.Update: See https://github.com/muan/details-on-details instead.
I did a talk at Brooklyn JS called Details on <details>
on 2018/07/19. I have way more details prepared than the ones that fit in the slides, so here's the real details on <details>
. ❤️
– @muan
<?PHP | |
// Generates a strong password of N length containing at least one lower case letter, | |
// one uppercase letter, one digit, and one special character. The remaining characters | |
// in the password are chosen at random from those four sets. | |
// | |
// The available characters in each set are user friendly - there are no ambiguous | |
// characters such as i, l, 1, o, 0, etc. This, coupled with the $add_dashes option, | |
// makes it much easier for users to manually type or speak their passwords. | |
// | |
// Note: the $add_dashes option will increase the length of the password by |